By continuing to browse on our website, you give to Lavoisier the permission to add cookies for the audience measurement.
To know more about cookies and their configuration, please go to the
Confidentiality & Security page.

Are psychometric tests valid for a new reality of artificial intelligence
systems, technology-enhanced humans, and hybrids yet to come? Are the
Turing Test, the ubiquitous CAPTCHAs, and the various animal cognition
tests the best alternatives?

In this fascinating and provocative
book, José Hernández-Orallo formulates major scientific questions,
integrates the most significant research developments, and offers a vision
of the universal evaluation of cognition. By replacing the dominant
anthropocentric stance with a universal perspective where living organisms
are considered as a special case, long-standing questions in the
evaluation of behavior can be addressed in a wider landscape. Can we
derive task difficulty intrinsically? Is a universal g factor - a common
general component for all abilities - theoretically possible?

Using
algorithmic information theory as a foundation, the book elaborates on the
evaluation of perceptual, developmental, social, verbal and collective
features and critically analyzes what the future of intelligence might
look like.